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How do tariffs work? | CNBC Explains - YouTube
Channel: CNBC International
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iPhones, umbrellas, shoes. These are just
some of the common items that make up
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the $505 billion worth of goods
that are made here in China.
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And are imported here
to the United States.
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President Trump is unapologetically
adding and increasing tariffs
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on many imports, prompting
retaliation from China and others.
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So how do tariffs work, and what
do they mean for the economy?
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A tariff is a tax on items
entering or leaving a country.
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The money collected under a tariff
is called a duty or a customs duty.
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And in the United States those duties are collected
by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
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Last year, U.S. import duties totaled up to $33.1 billion.
That's 1.4% of the total value of all imported goods.
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That makes U.S. tariffs among
the lowest in the world.
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But that doesn't mean every item entering the
U.S. is facing a 1.4% tariff. There's a huge range.
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Some items aren't taxed at all, while others,
like shoes, are taxed at around 11%.
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And upping that 11% to something like 25 or 30%
can cost the makers of these products a lot.
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Especially when you consider that 98% of
shoes sold in the U.S. are made overseas.
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Let's say I'm buying watches from China
to sell at big-box retail stores here in the U.S.
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Say each watch costs me $10. Add in a 20% tariff
to that, and I now have to pay $12 per watch.
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$2 doesn't sound like much but
if my order is 15,000 watches,
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my total cost has now gone
from $150,000 to $180,000.
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That 20% tariff on watches cost me
an unexpected $30,000 on goods.
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So if tariffs cost businesses so much
money, why have them in the first place?
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Well, there's two main reasons. First they
raise money. That revenue goes to the
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general fund of the U.S. Treasury, which
helps pay for running the government.
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Last year, the U.S. collected
almost $35 billion in duties.
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Number two, tariffs can help protect some
domestic industries from competition abroad.
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Think of it this way: if you're
charging Made in China more money
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that makes Made in America
suddenly seem more affordable.
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Let's go back to our watch example.
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If my manufacturer in China is sending over a batch
of watches that cost me $12 instead of $10,
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I might find a cheaper way to make them here
in the U.S. to avoid paying that 20% tariff.
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But my supplies used to make the watch
are likely going to need to be imported,
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likely, still from China. And those supplies
probably will have their own tariffs too.
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You can see how this can get complicated.
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There's another option.
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I could also potentially buy from another
country that's not subject to the tariffs
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on products from China, like India or
Vietnam. That's bad news for China.
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But it's not just China
that Trump has been after.
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When the U.S. president introduced
billions of dollars in new tariffs,
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countries like Canada and Mexico, as well as the
European Union, were quick to react and retaliate.
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So why is he kicking up the controversy
with America's biggest allies?
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Trump says he wants to dramatically reduce
the U.S.' trade deficit with other countries.
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A trade deficit is the amount by which a country's
imports exceed the value of its exports.
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Trump is hoping that by introducing
drastic tariffs it will reduce the size
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of the U.S.' trade deficit, and he's
particularly focused on China.
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The U.S.-China trade deficit is
estimated to be $370 billion.
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He hopes to reduce it
to $200 billion by 2020.
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So what does all this
mean for consumers?
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When tariffs are put into effect, the person likely
paying for that increase in cost is you and I.
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A number of American companies have said
increased tariffs will hurt their businesses,
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and ultimately they'll have to
increase prices for consumers.
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In the weeks following Trump's
announcement, prices went up on items
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ranging from a can of Coke to
toilet paper and kitchen towels.
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And some companies like Kimberly-Clark,
which makes Huggies and Kleenex,
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have even lowered their
annual forecasts.
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And the tariffs could badly hurt Chinese
companies and their products too.
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Some of the largest items that
the U.S. is shipping to China
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include things like soybeans,
aircraft and electrical machinery.
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So, when China retaliated by announcing
a 25% tariff on U.S.-made airplanes.
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That was a direct hit to Boeing, and the
company's stock price fell on the news.
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Boeing is selling planes to
China Southern Airlines Group,
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which plans to buy more than 300
aircraft in the next three years.
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So with higher tariffs on U.S. planes, it could buy a larger
share of airplanes from say France's Airbus instead.
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The vast majority of economists
surveyed by a Reuters poll said that
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import tariffs would do more harm
to the U.S. economy than good.
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Yet, like most things with President
Trump, he's standing his ground,
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as governments, companies and
consumers scramble to see what's next.
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